Popular Posts Today

Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Authorities Investigate Package Found Near Tracks

Written By Sepatu on Kamis, 20 September 2012 | 05.33

Authorities say the discovery of a package apparently containing human remains near a rail line in northern Virginia briefly disrupted four commuter trains at mid-week.

Virginia Railway Express officials say the remains were found on tracks near Burke. Four VRE commuter trains were temporarily delayed while authorities investigated the find.

Buses were brought to transport train riders during Wednesday evening's delays on the VRE system.

Authorities had no immediate coment on the discovery. Local reports said hundreds of commuters were impacted by the delays after the discovery near tracks at the Manassas Park station.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=9bd35a93475f681183f101c94845a7b1
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
05.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Beagle Survives 70-Foot Fall From NJ Bridge

A beagle named Brandi survived a 70-foot fall from a New Jersey bridge.

The dog got away from its owner during a walk along the Burlington Riverfront Promenade Friday night.

Bridge officer Rob Bittner saw Brandi walking up the Burlington-Bristol Bridge toward Pennsylvania.

Bittner tells The Courier-Post of Cherry Hill ( http://on.cpsj.com/Ps9e2y ) he turned on his emergency lights to slow traffic and followed the dog. Bittner says Brandi was doing fine until she got to the top of the span and her paws felt a steel grate.

The officer says Brandi jumped into the Delaware River as motorists tried to grab her.

The beagle's owner recovered her and took her to a veterinarian. Brandi was bruised around the abdomen, but didn't have any broken bones.

———

Information from: Courier-Post (Cherry Hill, N.J.), http://www.courierpostonline.com/

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=45ddc4b49e45cc5f64cc69a550d51bba
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
05.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Prosecutors Argue for Access to Holmes' Notebook

Ringkasan ini tidak tersedia. Harap klik di sini untuk melihat postingan.
05.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Nation's Weather

More rain is expected across the Great Lakes as a cold front moves through the region. A low pressure system moving eastward through Canada continues pushing a cold front through the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes. This will produce more rain showers across the Great Lakes, with periods of heavy rainfall anticipated along the downwind shores.

Cold air, meanwhile, will continue to pour in from Canada behind this system, allowing for cooler temperatures to linger across the Northern states. Expect overnight lows to dip into the lower 30s again Thursday night across northern Minnesota, northern Wisconsin, and the upper peninsula of Michigan.

AP

This NOAA satellite image taken Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012 at 1:45 a.m. EDT shows a stationary front across northern Florida with showers and a few thunderstorms. A cold front is moving through the Great Lakes with a line of showers and thunderstorms. (AP Photo/Weather Underground) Close

On the back side of this system, dry conditions will persist across the Northern Rockies and Northern Plains. These areas will continue to see dangerous fire weather conditions. Red flag warnings will remain in effect in these areas.

In the East, a ridge of high pressure continues to build across the Eastern valleys. This will bring another dry day to most of the East, with temperatures slowly returning to seasonable.

Showers and thunderstorms will persist across Florida as the tail end of a cold front slowly moves further into the Atlantic Ocean.

Temperatures in the lower 48 states ranged Wednesday from a morning low of 26 degrees at Stanley, Idaho, to a high of 102 at Palm Springs, Calif.

———

Online:

Weather Underground: http://www.wunderground.com

National Weather Service: http://iwin.nws.noaa.gov

Intellicast: http://www.intellicast.com

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=207fb0a94c39984da658b7b25d8bac6c
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
05.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Romney Vows to Be President for 'The 100 Percent'

Written By Sepatu on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 17.44

Mitt Romney said three times in the opening 10 minutes of tonight's Univision "Meet the Candidate" forum that his campaign is "about the 100 percent," a clear message to voters who have been swamped with sound bites and video clips that show the candidate's suggesting he wasn't concerned about the nearly half of the country unlikely to vote for him.

"My campaign is about the 100 percent of America," Romney said to the University of Miami crowd. "And I'm concerned about them. Life has become harder for Americans. I know I'm not going to get 100 percent of the vote. And my campaign will focus on the ones who will vote for me. ... I'm convinced that if we take a different course, you'll see incomes rising. I have a record, I've demonstrated my capacity to help the 100 percent."

Faced with some tough questions about immigration, Romney repeated his stance that the best path forward was a wholesale overhaul of the system that would encourage people in the country illegally now to "self-deport" and try to enter again under new laws.

"Do you think you're going to self-deport 11 million immigrants?" Univision anchor Jorge Campos asked pointedly.

Charles Dharapak/AP Photo

Mitt Romney Video: Republican vs. Democrat Reaction Watch Video
Mitt Romney Video: Campaign Does Damage Control Watch Video
Carney on Romney's '47 Percent' vs Obama's 'Guns and Religion' Watch Video

"I believe that people make their own choices as to whether they want to go home and that's what I mean by self-deportation," Romney replied, appearing to soften his message from the primary debates, in which self-deportation was forefront in his immigration plan. "People decide whether they want to go back to their country of origin and get in line legally to come to this country. Look, legal immigration is critical to this country. I love legal immigration."

When pressed further on the Arizona law that would require legal immigrants to provide papers in case they're arrested or stopped by police for any reason, Romney declined to take a firm position. At the time of the Supreme Court decision upholding most of the law, Romney would only say that President Obama "has failed to provide any leadership on immigration" and that states deserve the right to craft their own immigration laws when the federal government fails to do so. He said about the same tonight.

The Republican also answered questions about his plan to repeal Obama's health care law. When asked how he felt about the the president and other Democrats' calling him "the grandfather" of the new "Affordable Care Act," Romney laughed.

"I don't think they meant it as a compliment," he said, "but I'll take it. This was during my primary, we thought it might not be helpful."

Democrats have seized on the fact that Romney included an individual mandate -- similar to that in President Obama's law -- in his health care plan during his time as Bay State governor.

Romney also stuck by opposition to same-sex marriage. When asked whether he would react differently if one of his five sons were gay, the candidate said, "My kids are all married, so I'd be surprised."

The appearance on Univision, which will host President Obama in a similar setting Thursday afternoon, marks the beginning of a larger effort to connect with Latino voters, a core group Romney has had trouble swaying in the polls. He spoke at the U.S Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Monday and will campaign across Florida in the coming days.

Romney acknowledged the problem with a quick joke at the beginning of tonight's forum and, of course, during the now infamous, secretly taped fundraiser in Florida.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=4ff1e74c299d75224e7683bbd308a1c1
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
17.44 | 0 komentar | Read More

Defrocked Monsignor Sues in NYC Sex Abuse Scandal

A defrocked Roman Catholic monsignor who once led fundraising for the Archdiocese of New York has sued the church for libel.

Charles Kavanagh's lawsuit was filed Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan. Kavanagh accuses the archdiocese of libeling him by saying he had sexually abused a teenage student in the 1980s even though the now-middle-aged man admits he lied.

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages.

The church defrocked the 74-year-old Kavanagh in 2010, eight years after the accuser claimed the clergyman touched him inappropriately during a trip to Washington D.C.

Kavanagh was the archdiocese's vicar of development in the 1990s.

Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling says lawyers haven't yet reviewed the lawsuit, but he stands by his May statement that the church didn't base its decision on the Washington trip.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=e3ed9336c00b26cae478a7939c62ae4d
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
17.13 | 0 komentar | Read More

Drug Suspect Withdraws Plea in Mass. Lab Scandal

A drug defendant serving time in jail has been allowed to withdraw his guilty plea and will be released while awaiting trial. It's the first of what could be many cases jeopardized by a scandal at a Massachusetts drug-testing lab.

David Danielli was originally charged with trafficking oxycodone pills, but he pleaded guilty to a lesser charge in June. The came after Department of Public Health officials told Norfolk County prosecutors that drug samples in his case might be called into question because testing protocols were violated by a chemist at a lab in Boston. Danielli was sentenced to serve a year in the Norfolk County House of Correction.

Chemist Annie Dookhan is suspected of tampering with evidence, altering the weights of drug samples and purposely mishandling samples. The investigation prompted the shutdown of the lab last month. She resigned from the lab in March and hasn't been criminally charged, though Attorney General Martha Coakley's office is conducting a criminal investigation.

Dookhan hasn't responded to repeated requests for comment.

After state police took over operation of the lab July 1, they discovered that the scope of the chemist's violations was much greater than originally believed. Danielli's lawyer then filed a motion for him to withdraw his guilty plea, which was granted Wednesday by a judge.

David Traub, a spokesman for Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey, said Danielli will appear Thursday in Norfolk Superior Court, where he is expected to be released on personal recognizance.

Prosecutors supported his motion to withdraw his plea because of the questions raised in a widening investigation into the chemist's actions.

"The Constitution demanded that we join defense counsel in seeking this defendant's release while we reassess and re-examine the evidence and the case against him," Morrissey said.

"We will work with defense counsel on this case and on other cases as long as it takes to fulfill the protections of the United States Constitution."

Traub said Danielli's case will go back on a list of cases awaiting trial until prosecutors and his lawyer figure out how to handle the case.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=9978ca9c4a4bc4de5052e9e41dbefa7e
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
16.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

US Plans to Invite China to 2014 Naval Exercises

The U.S. intends to ask China to a send a ship to join the world's largest maritime exercises for the first time in Hawaiian waters in two years.

The Navy will invite the Asian nation to send a ship to the 2014 Rim of the Pacific exercises, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told reporters in Beijing on Wednesday.

China sent military observers to watch the drills in 1998. but has never sent a vessel.

Panetta said he discussed ways to extend cooperation between the two militaries during a meeting with China's national defense minister, Gen. Liang Guanglie.

The defense secretary noted that China and the U.S. participated this week in an exercise to counter pirates in the Gulf of Aden between Somalia and Yemen.

"To build on this positive momentum, I informed General Liang today that the United States Navy will invite China to send a ship to participate in RIMPAC 2014 exercise," Panetta said in a transcript of the news conference provided by the Pentagon.

The U.S. Pacific Fleet hosts the drills every two years.

This year, 22 countries participated, including Japan, Russia and South Korea. The exercises lasted over a month and included 25,000 sailors and other military personnel, 42 surface ships, six submarines and 200 aircraft.

It's not clear what role China would play during the next drills.

"There are a lot of details to work out in the next 18 months for all nations participating in RIMPAC 2014, including China," Pacific Fleet spokesman Capt. Darryn James said in a statement.

Each nation has a chance to train for its objectives, and all participant objectives would be considered during planning, he said.

The exercises date back to 1971 and have expanded in recent years. Eight nations took part in 2006, 10 in 2008, and 14 two years ago.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=ee92b505d7f682c76751e97657d5c8c2
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
16.13 | 0 komentar | Read More

Lower Gas Prices on the Way?

Sep 19, 2012 5:18pm

Oil prices have been sharply lower this week, down about 7 percent since Friday.

In New York trading today oil settled at $91.98, down $3.31 for the day.

The recent run up in the price of oil may have been a bit of an anomaly.  Analysts have been saying for weeks that oil prices near the $100 mark seemed too high.

Oil prices may also be coming down because U.S. oil inventories reported by the Energy Information Administration were higher than expected.

The price drop is particularly significant because prices are coming down despite QE 3, which critics of the Fed's move often cite concerns that it could increase the price of oil and other commodity prices.

Oil today had its lowest close since Aug. 3.   The crude oil price eventually sets the price of gasoline, so this confirms forecasts that gas prices will drop through the end of the month and the end of the year.

Nevertheless, a major flare up in oil producing countries in the Middle East or North Africa could could have an unforeseen impact on prices.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=a07eb6e02f40bbce7492e5370676466a
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
15.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

UNC-CH Board Asks Resigning Chancellor to Stay

The board of trustees for North Carolina's flagship public university is asking its chancellor to change his mind about resigning and stay on the job.

After a closed-door meeting, the board at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill passed a resolution saying that its members believe the school is better off today because of Chancellor Holden Thorp. It asked that he reconsider his decision to leave his post in June, saying it's in the best interest of the university that he stay.

Thorp announced his resignation after struggling the past two years with several scandals, including the most recent one dealing with fundraisers who traveled for personal reasons using donated money.

The board also approved the hiring of an interim vice chancellor for advancement, replacing one of those fundraisers.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=131c464dca94089634bd647b1fd30a9f
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
15.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

FBI Asked to Keep Data on Anti-Sikh Hate Crimes

The son of a massacre victim at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin is asking the federal government to begin collecting statistics on hate crimes against Sikhs.

The 18-year-old Harpreet Sing Saini (sy-EE-nee) urged senators at a hearing Wednesday to give his late mother the dignity of being a statistic.

Saini's mother, Paramjit Kaur Saini, was among six people killed and four wounded by a gunman on Aug. 5 before a service was to begin.

The shooter, Wade Michael Page, was shot during a firefight with police and died after he shot himself in the head.

A Justice Department official says the agency will bring together an array of religious groups in October andl make recommendations to the FBI afterward on collecting the information.

More than 400 people attended the hearing.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=c21d82113d1245715e458d49fa4a5ddd
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
15.13 | 0 komentar | Read More

Actress in Anti-Muslim Film Sues for Its Removal

An actress who appears in the anti-Muslim film trailer that has sparked riots in the Middle East is suing the filmmaker for fraud and slander, and is asking a judge to order YouTube to take down the clip.

Cindy Lee Garcia's lawsuit filed Wednesday in Los Angeles claims the actress was duped by Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, the man behind "Innocence of Muslims" who has been forced into hiding since its 14-minute trailer rose to prominence last week. She was unaware of the film's anti-Muslim content and that the pages of the script she received had no mention of the prophet Muhammad, according to her complaint.

The lawsuit states Garcia responded to an ad and thought she was appearing in an ancient Egyptian adventure film. Dialogue in the amateurish film was later dubbed to include anti-Islamic messages and to portray Muhammad as a fraud, a womanizer and a child molester.

"The film is vile and reprehensible," Garcia's attorney, M. Cris Armenta, wrote in the document.

"This lawsuit is not an attack on the First Amendment nor on the right of Americans to say what they think, but does request that the offending content be removed from the Internet," the complaint states. Garcia's attorneys plan to seek an injunction against the film Thursday in a Los Angeles court.

YouTube has refused Garcia's requests to remove the film, according to the lawsuit. The complaint contends that keeping it online violates her right of publicity, invades her privacy rights and the post-filming dialogue changes cast her in a false light. "(Garcia) had a legally protected interest in her privacy and the right to be free from having hateful words put in her mouth or being depicted as a bigot," the lawsuit states.

Garcia, who lives in Bakersfield, Calif., has received death threats since the trailer began drawing attention, and her suit states she no longer is able to visit her grandchildren as a result. It has also harmed her reputation and caused "shame, mortification, and hurt feelings" and will impact her ability to get future acting roles, the suit states.

An email sent to Google seeking comment was not immediately returned. The search giant owns YouTube and has blocked users in Saudi Arabia, Libya and Egypt from viewing the "Innocence of Muslims" trailer. It has also blocked the video from being viewed in Indonesia and India because it violates laws in those countries.

A man who answered the phone at the law offices of Steven Seiden, who represents Nakoula on any criminal repercussions he may face, declined comment. He said Seiden does not represent Nakoula, who is on probation for a bank fraud case in which he opened 600 fraudulent credit accounts, in civil matters.

According to the terms of his probation, Nakoula was allowed to only access website with the permission of probation officials and for work purposes. It is unclear who uploaded the film to the site.

The lawsuit also names Sam Bacile, an alias that Nakoula gave to The Associated Press after the trailer was linked to protests that have since killed at least 30 people in seven countries, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya.

———

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=b9d2723da29fdc9b2cda3005daec9094
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
15.13 | 0 komentar | Read More

John Hinckley Case on Hold for Hospital Reply

A judge in Washington is ordering a mental health center caring for John Hinckley to decide how to proceed with a request to expand the time he spends away. Earlier, the hospital had said it didn't want to be involved.

Hinckley shot and wounded President Ronald Reagan in 1981.

In late 2011 and early 2012, lawyers spent two weeks discussing plans that would expand Hinckley's release privileges from a psychiatric hospital for the 10-day stretches he is allowed at his mother's home in Virginia. He is seeking more time away.

Part of the plan was that Hinckley would attend group programs at People's Place in Williamsburg, Va., but it has since withdrawn its participation.

Judge Paul Friedman is giving People's Place until Oct. 19 to say how it plans to proceed.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=b26fbaab86c5d1f05f4b69da5b472677
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

School Counselor Fired Over Dating Book

A Chicago high school guidance counselor who works part time at a strip club was fired this week after publishing a sexually-explicit self-help book for women entitled "It's Her Fault."

Bryan Craig, who worked as a guidance counselor at Rich Central High School since 2004, self-published his book in August. He was put on administrative leave Aug. 31, and fired by the school board Tuesday night in a 6-0 vote, according to the school board. The book contained "offensive content regarding women and sex," the school board said.

The book aims at helping women understand their relationships with men better, the guidance counselor claims. It includes tips Craig gleaned while working as a bouncer at a strip club, as well as sex tips, including how to be dominating and submissive.

Fertility Treatments Get Indiana Teacher Fired? Watch Video
Teachers Allegedly Fired for Reporting Abuse Watch Video

"In some cases, strippers and dancers show the overall dominance a woman can have over a man," Craig writes in his book. "Not to say that stripping is what has to be done to truly establish dominance, but these women's mind set is in the right place in order to meet the true potential of the point of this book."

He advises women to only discuss things that men like to talk about when trying to engage their partners in conversation.

"The ultimate point here is to utilize your worth, brains, experience or even sex appeal to potentially dominate one of the least intelligent creatures on the planet when it comes to the opposite sex," Craig writes.

The school board said that Craig's book showed a lack of good judgment and professionalism.

"Mr. Craig's conduct in this matter fell far short of our expectations and evoked outrage for me, members of this board and many others in our district who have come to expect the highest level of professionalism and sound judgment from the people they entrust with their children each day," the board said in a statement.

Craig declined to comment to ABC News today, referring questions to his attorney, Stephen Richards.

"His First Amendments rights were violated," Richards said. "People may not like what he did or said, but he has a right not to be fired."

Richards said that they planned to file a lawsuit against the school district over Craig's dismissal.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=4a82c886500dba2d1604f933ea8e6988
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Who Killed 2 Rapists Gets Life

A Washington man who gunned down two convicted sex offenders offered little in the way of apology even as he was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Patrick Drum, 34, hailed by some as a vigilante hero and others as a cold-blooded killer, called the grief the victim's families felt "collateral damage that I feel bad about."

"As far as the men themselves," he said at his sentencing Tuesday referring to the two men he admits to killing in June, "actions speak louder than words."

Drum shot Gary Lee Blanton, 28, on June 2 at the home both men shared near Sequim, Wash. The following morning, Dunn shot and killed Jerry Wayne Ray, 57.

Both men were known to Drum and were registered as Level 2 sex offenders, meaning the state believed they presented a moderate risk of recidivism.

Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daly News/AP Photo

Cremated Remains of 56 People Found in Home Watch Video
Wife Accused of Trying to Decapitate Husband Watch Video

Blanton was convicted of third degree rape while he was a juvenile. In court, during Drum's sentencing, Blanton's wife Leslie Blanton said her husband was convicted of statutory rape after having consensual sex with a high school freshman when he was a senior, according to ABC News affiliate KOMO. Ray, the second victim, was convicted of child rape.

After shooting Ray, police were tipped off to Drum's whereabouts when witnesses reported a suspicious person. Cops found Drum's abandoned rental car with a note that included an apology and full confession.

After his arrest, Drum again confessed to police and said he would have continued killing people were he not picked up.

In court Tuesday, Leslie Blanton said her young children found their father after Drum shot him. She also said Drum's supporters harassed her outside her home.

"It was never my intent to hurt the families involved. That's like collateral damage that I feel bad about," Drum told the court.

"If anybody is bothering folks, the families of my victims, I would ask that they not do that. As for the men themselves, actions speak louder than words," he said.

ABC News affiliate KOMO-TV contributed to this report.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=d3cd57598916c243e3b42f42aa3319fe
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Feds Approve First Leg of Calif. High-Speed Rail

The Federal Railroad Administration gave its approval Wednesday for construction on the first phase of California's high-speed rail system, clearing the final technical hurdle for construction to start next year on a 65-mile span from Merced to Fresno.

The decision supports the California High-Speed Rail Authority's so-called hybrid alternative, which state officials say is the least costly approach and the one that is least harmful to the environment. Rail authority Chief Executive Officer Jeff Morales said the federal decision will allow the project to break ground next year.

"This is now a statewide rail modernization plan which will not only deliver high-speed rail but also will invest billions of dollars of improvements to local and regional rail systems around the state immediately," Morales said.

Federal officials reviewed the plan to ensure compliance with dozens of federal regulations, including the Endangered Species Act, U.S. Fish and Wildlife regulations and the National Historic Preservation Act. The plan also requires the rail authority to provide financial compensation for environmental damage such as increased pollution or harm to wetlands and water sources.

Lawmakers approved the first phase of the planned 800-mile line this summer, allowing the state to begin selling $2.6 billion in bonds for construction of the initial 130-mile segment of the bullet train in the Central Valley. It also allowed the state to tap $3.2 billion from the federal government.

The total cost of the project that would eventually connect Northern and Southern California is at least $68 billion.

The project still faces significant legal challenges that could delay next year's planned construction start. Groups representing Central Valley farmers claim in lawsuits that the state failed to conduct thorough environmental reviews, as required by California law.

"We're not seeking necessarily to stop the project entirely, but we do think the project should be stopped until some of these environmental issues, and their severity, are addressed," said Anja Raudabaugh, executive director of the Madera County Farm Bureau.

The bureau is among the groups that last week petitioned Sacramento County Superior Court for a preliminary injunction that would speed up hearings on their claims.

Voters approved issuing $10 billion in bonds for the project in 2008, but public support for the plan has dwindled in recent years as the project's expected costs have soared.

Gov. Jerry Brown, a Democrat, remains a champion of the project.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=b7d007f8defa6e4d451ee6ad0aa9ab95
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mom Accused of Aiding $6K in Home Vandalism

Sep 19, 2012 3:44pm

A Texas mom has been arrested and charged with felony criminal mischief for her alleged participation in a neighborhood prank that caused an estimated $6,000 in damages.

Tara Mauney, 41, was charged for the July vandalism of a home in her upscale neighborhood in Colleyville, Texas, in the Dallas-Forth Worth area.

Mauney allegedly bought supplies to help a group of middle school students who were having a sleepover at her house vandalize another neighborhood home where a separate sleepover was going on, according to ABC News' Dallas-Fort Worth affiliate WFAA.

The allegedly victimized homeowners found chicken in their mailbox and words like "whore house" and "sluts" smeared in Sharpie and mustard on and around the house, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by WFAA. There were also reportedly feminine products doused in ketchup strewn about the property.

Mauney's attorney Tom Hall vehemently denied that his client had anything to do with the vandalism.

"I believe that she has been wrongfully accused and charged," Hall told ABCNews.com. "I think the timeline has gotten confused."

Authorities say they have video of Mauney purchasing over 100 rolls of toilet paper at a Walmart before the incident, but Hall said that does not prove that she was involved in the derogatory vandalism.

"I think she did buy the toilet paper and I don't think that's a crime in the state of Texas," he said. "Tara had absolutely nothing to do with any criminal conduct."

Hall said that it is fairly typical for neighborhood kids in Mauney's neighborhood to toilet paper other houses and that the community takes it in stride as a childhood prank. He said other houses were toilet papered on the same night.

"There was some high-spirited behavior that night," Hall said. "The neighbors came out, waved at each other…no harm, no foul."

He claims it was later in the night, once Mauney and other parents were already in bed, that the children sneaked out and vandalized the house.

He said the children who wrote the derogatory words should be punished, but that they are simply using Mauney as a scapegoat.

"These are decent, hardworking, responsible citizens in a very nice neighborhood that have had their lives blown apart in the last few days," he said.

Mauney is out of jail on bond and is expected to appear in court later this week.

ht Mauney Tara mother prankster thg 120919 wblog Texas Mom Accused of Aiding $6,000 in Home Vandalism

(Image credit: Obtained by ABC NEWS)

SHOWS: Good Morning America

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=4b39f9b91ff86ba2cb4fd897f236db45
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Arizona Immigration Law Spurs Education Campaign

A day after the most contentious provision of Arizona's immigration law took effect, rallies were planned around Phoenix to protest the law that civil rights activists contend will lead to systematic racial profiling.

Leticia Ramirez has been telling immigrants who are in the United States illegally, like herself, that they should offer only their name and date of birth — and carry no documents that show where they were born, if pulled over by police.

"We want to teach the community how to defend themselves, how to answer to police, how to be prepared, and to have confidence that they're going to have help," said Ramirez, a 27-year-old from Torreon in the Mexican state of Coahuila.

U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton ruled Tuesday that police can immediately start enforcing the law's so-called "show me your papers" provision. It requires officers, while enforcing other laws, to question the immigration status of those suspected of being in the country illegally.

AP

FILE - In this July 29, 2010 file photo, Maricopa County Sheriff's deputies, left, check the shoes of a suspect arrested during a crime suppression sweep in Phoenix. A judge in Arizona on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012 ruled that police can immediately start enforcing the most contentious section of the state's immigration law, marking the first time officers can carry out the so-called "show me your papers" provision. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File) Close

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the provision in June on the grounds that it doesn't conflict with federal law. Opponents argued that it would lead to systematic racial profiling and unreasonably long detention of Latinos, and unsuccessfully asked Bolton to block it.

Bolton said the law's opponents were merely speculating on racial profiling claims. She did leave the door open to challenges if the claims can be proven.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is considering a request to halt the questioning requirement.

In the meantime, a hot line by civil rights advocates has been fielding calls from people wanting to know their rights if questioned about their immigration status.

The advocates are asking people to document abuse and police departments not to enforce the provision as a way to gain cooperation from immigrants in reporting crimes. But not enforcing the provision could open up officers to lawsuits from people claiming authorities aren't complying with the law.

Advocates planned to gather Wednesday to address the Phoenix City Council about their concerns on the law and in front of the U.S. Immigrations and Custom Enforcement building to protest the law and federal immigration policies. A march to the Maricopa County jail in downtown Phoenix is scheduled for Saturday.

Arizona lawmakers passed the law in 2010 amid voter frustration with the state's role as the busiest illegal entry point in the country. Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina and Utah have adopted variations on Arizona's law.

Republican Gov. Jan Brewer says it won't cure the state's immigration woes but could push the federal government to act on immigration reform.

———

Fonseca reported from Flagstaff, Ariz.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=5a656450c83894be7c13b1e06d238c11
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pollock Top Seafood by Volume, Crabs Tops in Value

Highlights of a federal report about the U.S. fishing industry in 2011.

TOP FISHING PORTS BY QUANTITY (IN WEIGHT):

1. Dutch Harbor, Alaska

2. Empire-Venice, La.

3. Akutan, Alaska

4. Reedville, Va.

5. Kodiak, Alaska.

TOP FISHING PORTS BY VALUE:

1. New Bedford, Mass.

2. Dutch Harbor, Alaska

3. Kodiak, Alaska

4. Akutan, Alaska

5. Cape May-Wildwood, N.J.

TOP SPECIES BY TOTAL WEIGHT OF CATCH:

1. Pollock

2. Menhaden

3. Salmon

4. Flatfish

5. Cod

TOP SPECIES BY TOTAL VALUE OF CATCH:

1. Crab

2. Salmon

3. Scallops

4. Shrimp

5. Lobster

Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=1d96285d92e7936a703bf0690344da55
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
14.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

W.Va., Va. Weighing Impact of Alpha Mine Layoffs

When 400 Appalachian coal miners learned their lives were turning upside-down with the sudden shutdown of mines in three states, Trent Lucas got relatively good news: He'll still have a job.

The 34-year-old Alpha Natural Resources miner from Wise, Va., will transfer from the now-idled Guest Mountain No. 9 to the Osaka mine, but it's still only a 45-minute commute. His best friend, a mine supervisor, wasn't so lucky. He's among the 150 people for whom Alpha says it has no other positions.

"I went to the bank and the lady in the drive-through window asked me if Trent still had a job," Lucas' wife Shana said Wednesday. "I told her, 'Thank God he does.' And she said, 'I'm very happy for you guys. ... Sadly, my husband lost his job.'

"It broke my heart," Shana Lucas said. "You could see the hurt and worry in her eyes. And I felt somewhat guilty."

On Tuesday, Virginia-based Alpha announced it was immediately closing eight mines — four in West Virginia, three in Virginia and one in Pennsylvania — and eliminating 1,200 jobs companywide by early 2013.

Alpha said 270 of the 400 workers affected by the first round of shutdowns will be reassigned or will replace outside contractors.

But in West Virginia, 80 miners are out of luck as the company cuts production by 16 million tons and shifts its focus from supplying U.S. power plants to supplying power plants and steel mills overseas. In Virginia, 70 workers now must scramble for a new job. In Pennsylvania, three are unemployed.

Communities are still trying to gauge the impact,

Fayette County, W.Va., gets about $750,000 a year in coal severance taxes, Commissioner Matt Wender said. How much the county will lose from the shutdown of the Alloy deep and surface mines is unclear.

Though the job losses aren't as extensive as he initially feared, "obviously, the total effect is negative," he said.

There's also a trickle-down effect as money that had been spent on local businesses vanishes.

"These are jobs that are lost — and people who were earning a pretty darn good wage," Wender said.

Alpha said Wednesday it took 2 million tons out of production with the initial idlings. While spokesman Ted Pile would not say where the next layoffs will occur, he said "it's obvious more is to come."

Alpha said about 40 percent of its production cuts will come from high-cost Eastern mines, while about half will occur in the Powder River Basin in Wyoming, the largest coal-producing region in the U.S.

Another 800 positions will have to be eliminated in the coming months, Pile said, and there will likely be fewer reassignment opportunities or open positions as time goes on.

"Having to send home good, hard-working men and women is only the option of last resort," he said. "But we are unfortunately dealing with an entirely new reality."

Pile said each decision must make sense for the long-term health of the company and must honor supply contracts already in place.

"We are looking at all of our operations. What are the costs? What are the savings? What are the risks or opportunities in light of the changes in the market?" he said.

The answers to those questions will determine which ones are most cost-efficient, provide better-quality coal at a realistic price and can be more flexible with customer demands.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=1abfdfb0deebb452de32951b672511ce
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
13.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ban: Syria Will Top UN General Assembly Agenda

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says the Syrian crisis will top the agenda of the General Assembly gathering of world leaders next week.

Ban lamented that both sides seem determined to end the conflict by force and said diplomatic efforts must continue.

At a news conference Tuesday, he said both President Bashar Assad's regime and the rebels trying to topple him must support U.N.-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi's efforts to find a political solution. He also called on any nations sending arms into Syria to stop.

Ban also addressed the ongoing protests against an anti-Islamic video made in the U.S. He said, "I once again condemn those who deliberately provoke others with hatred and bigotry. I also join with others in speaking out against those who, in response to such provocations, fan those flames further still."

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=f722d411b6c9d2f405ce72c66e7f7b7d
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
13.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

Prosecutor: Dad Killed Girl Over Toilet Training

A Detroit man was so obsessed over toilet training that he fatally beat his 2-year-old daughter for having an accident, a prosecutor said Wednesday in an opening statement to jurors at the man's first-degree murder trial.

D'Andre Lane also is charged with child abuse in the Dec. 2 disappearance of Bianca Jones, whose body has never been found. Lane told police the toddler was abducted during a carjacking. The car was found less than an hour later, but the girl wasn't in it.

Lane, who has fathered seven children with seven women, is accused of beating Bianca to death with a stick with a towel wrapped in duct tape, and disposing of her body. Lane told officers during questioning that he had spanked the child for wetting herself.

"He believed that if 2-year-olds had accidents they should be physically punished," Wayne County Assistant Prosecutor Carin Goldfarb told jurors. "The defendant staged a carjacking to cover up the death of his baby."

Lane put the child's body in the car the next day as he was going to take an older daughter and a nephew to school, Goldfarb said.

"The defendant staged a carjacking to cover up the death of his baby," the prosecutor said.

Defense attorney Terry Johnson has said prosecutors have no evidence against Lane and their "case is based on the argument that he spanked her."

Johnson told the jury there was no evidence of physical harm and that while Lane may have hit the girl with a stick, it had a protective cover to prevent harm. Johnson also said Lane was distraught at the disappearance of his daughter and cooperated with police.

"They want to paint him as the embodiment of evil," said Johnson.

The defense lawyer told jurors that prosecutors are asking them to take a "leap of faith" and convict Lane.

"I don't want you to take a leap of faith; I want you to walk through the evidence step by step," Johnson said.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=95727046481fc5d9641d6d249fe3aaa9
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
13.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

Video: Wis. Fetal-Abduction Suspect Details Attack

A Milwaukee woman accused of killing a pregnant woman and trying to steal her fetus described the attack in a videotape prosecutors played for jurors Wednesday, telling investigators she repeatedly bashed the victim in the head with a baseball bat before choking her to death.

Prosecutors played about 38 minutes of a 90-minute police interview conducted with Annette Morales-Rodriguez last October. In the recording, she describes how she attacked 23-year-old Maritza Ramirez-Cruz and then performed a crude cesarean section with a small blade in the hopes of passing the baby off as her own.

The 34-year-old has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree intentional homicide in the death of the mother and her full-term fetus. A conviction on either count carries a mandatory life sentence, although a judge could allow for the possibility of parole. Wisconsin does not have the death penalty.

Her public defender contends the homicides weren't intentional because Morales-Rodriguez didn't intend for anyone to die.

As the video played, Morales-Rodriguez sat silently in the courtroom, her head bowed as she stared at the table where she was sitting.

In the recording, she sits at a desk in a small interrogation room, sobbing and sniffling and occasionally covering her face with her hands. Her voice is generally unwavering but she frequently pauses and sighs deeply. She speaks in Spanish and police detective Rodolfo Gomez repeats her words in English.

AP

Annette Morales-Rodriguez, right, appears at her Milwaukee trial on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012, to face charges that she killed a pregnant woman and tried to steal her full-term fetus. Her defense attorney, Debra Patterson, left, told jurors the homicides weren't intentional, and that her client never meant for the mother or baby to die.(AP Photo/Dinesh Ramde) Close

She tells Gomez that her boyfriend desperately wanted a son, but she couldn't "stay pregnant." She says she faked two previous pregnancies, each time claiming she miscarried.

She says she told her boyfriend a third time she was pregnant. When Gomez asks how she planned to extricate herself from that lie she says she figured she could claim another miscarriage but also considered other options. Those included committing suicide or telling her boyfriend the truth, as well as stealing a baby from a pregnant woman.

She described how she met Ramirez-Cruz at a community center that provides social services for Hispanics, and offered her a ride. She says Ramirez-Cruz accepted, and Morales-Rodriguez first took her to a drugstore for anti-nausea medication.

Eventually Morales-Rodriguez began to panic, unsure whether she could go through with her plan. She says she stopped at her own home briefly and left the young woman in the car, but Ramirez-Cruz came inside to use the bathroom. That's when Morales-Rodriguez says she launched her attack.

"The girl came out of the bathroom and she hit her with a bat. A wooden bat," Gomez says, translating Morales-Rodriguez's words for his partner in the interrogation room. "She hit her twice in the head."

With no urging, Morales-Rodriguez goes on to volunteer grisly details describing a fight in which she continued beating the victim until Ramirez-Cruz's eyeglasses broke. She describes choking Ramirez-Cruz until she passes out, and then putting duct tape over her eyes and nose and wrapping a plastic bag around her head. She says she used a small blade to slice the victim open from one hip to the other and pull out the non-breathing boy.

Also Wednesday, prosecutor Mark Williams showed jurors a number of graphic photos, including a picture of the victim's disemboweled abdomen. One juror put her hand over her mouth, and another rested his forehead on his palm and looked away for a moment.

During cross-examination, Gomez confirmed to public defender Debra Patterson that Morales-Rodriguez said she was "sorry for the girl" and that she never meant for the baby to die.

The trial, which began Tuesday, is expected to wrap up by the end of the week. The defense has declined to say whether Morales-Rodriguez will take the stand.

———

Dinesh Ramde can be reached at dramde(at)ap.org.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=de263ba53a3b418d3c4a5cfe9557bc03
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
12.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

US Seafood Catch Reaches 17-Year High

The U.S. seafood catch reached a 17-year high last year, with all fishing regions of the country showing increases in both the volume and value of their harvests.

Commercial fishermen last year caught 10.1 billion pounds of fish and shellfish valued at a record $5.3 billion, according to a report released Wednesday by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That's a 23 percent increase in catch by weight and a 17 percent increase in value over 2010.

New Bedford, Mass., was the highest-valued port for the 12th straight year, due largely to its scallop fishery. Dutch Harbor, Alaska, was the No. 1 port for seafood volume for the 15th year in a row.

The increases are evidence that fish populations are rebuilding, said Sam Rauch, deputy assistant administrator for NOAA's Fisheries Service.

Still, a number of fisheries are in trouble. The Department of Commerce has declared disasters for cod and other so-called groundfish in New England, oyster and blue crab fisheries in Mississippi, and chinook salmon in Alaska's Yukon and Kuskokwin rivers.

"Overall nationally, the numbers are very good news," Rauch said. "But we don't want to miss the fact that there are parts of the industry that are or soon will be suffering economic pain."

Alaska led all states by far in catch volume, with 5.4 billion pounds, followed by Louisiana, California, Virginia and Washington, according to the report. Alaska was also tops in the value of its catch, at $1.9 billion, followed by Massachusetts, Maine, Louisiana and Washington.

AP

FILE - This April 30, 2004 file photograph shows fishing boats docked at the pier in New Bedford, Mass. The U.S. seafood catch reached a 17-year high in 2011, with all fishing regions of the country showing increases in both the volume and value of their harvests. New Bedford, Mass., had the highest-valued catch for the 12th straight year, due largely to its scallop fishery. (AP Photo/Stew Milne) Close

Fishermen brought 706 million pounds of product to Dutch Harbor, the leading port by volume, while New Bedford, the top port by value, had $369 million worth of seafood cross its docks.

All nine of NOAA's fishing regions saw the volume and value of their catches go up in 2011. The numbers nationally were boosted by sharp increases for Gulf of Mexico menhaden, Alaska pollock and Pacific hake, also known as whiting.

The catch in the Gulf of Mexico rose to its highest volume since 1999 following a 2010 fishing season that was shortened by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. In all, last year's Gulf catch rose 55 percent to nearly 2 billion pounds, with the value rising 25 percent to $797 million.

While certain regions were bolstered by strong showings in some fisheries, other sectors didn't fare so well.

New England, for instance, had strong lobster and scallop harvests. At the same time, fishermen who catch groundfish were having a tough time of it, with sharp cuts in quotas expected for next year because of dwindling populations.

It's good that the overall harvest numbers are growing nationwide, but that doesn't help groundfishermen, said Russell Shearman, 64, who fishes out of Gloucester, Mass.

Sherman, who owns a 72-foot boat, has had to spend $40,000 of his personal savings the past two years to keep his business afloat. With groundfishing in such bad shape, he's trying his hand at catching squid for the first time, he said.

"I'm pretty much out of business in groundfishing," he said in a phone interview from Stonington, Conn., where he was preparing to go squid fishing. "I'm nearing retirement, only I'm not retiring because I can't afford to."

Rauch said he expects the overall catch to continue going up in the years ahead, thanks to rebuilding fish populations and improved fisheries management.

The report also showed that Americans ate an average of 15 pounds of seafood per person in 2011, down from 15.8 pounds in 2010.

About 91 percent of the seafood consumed in the U.S. was imported, up from 86 percent in 2010. A portion of the imported seafood, however, was caught by U.S. fishermen, exported to other countries for processing then imported back into the U.S.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=5bc28f07c40a5d0561855bff709b5ac5
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
12.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Judge: Murder Defendant's DNA Can Be Collected

Lawyers for a prominent professional tennis referee who is charged with the coffee-cup killing of her husband lost a bid Wednesday to block California prosecutors from taking a sample of her DNA.

Lois Ann Goodman, who is free on $500,000 bail and wearing an electronic monitoring device, appeared in court with her lawyers. They argued it would be an impermissible intrusion to force her to give a saliva sample.

A judge told them it is permissible to take the sample, as long as it is done in a private setting.

Goodman's lawyers said they will consider appealing.

Goodman, who has refereed matches between some of tennis' greatest players, has pleaded not guilty to killing her 80-year-old husband by beating him with a coffee cup and using its broken handle to stab him.

She was arrested last month, just before she was to referee a match at the U.S. Open in New York.

Her husband, Alan Goodman, died in April. Authorities initially believed he likely fell down stairs at home while she was away but later decided it was homicide. He was struck 10 times on the head, prosecutors said.

After the attack, Lois Goodman left to referee a tennis match and have her nails done, authorities said.

The couple had been married nearly 50 years and have three grown children.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=4e987649af877fe22b427576691355b1
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
12.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Indicted in NYC Central Park Attack

New York City prosecutors say a grand jury has voted to indict a drifter on charges he sexually assaulted a 73-year-old birdwatcher in Central Park.

The indictment naming David Albert Mitchell was announced in court on Wednesday without the defendant there. The 42-year-old has been jailed since his arrest last week on rape and other charges.

AP

In this undated photo provided by the Virginia Department of Corrections, inmate David Albert Mitchell is shown. Mitchell was charged Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012 with rape and assault after the victim identified him as the person who raped and beat her in New York's Central Park. (AP Photo/Virginia Department of Corrections) Close

Manhattan prosecutors have accused Mitchell of assaulting the woman in broad daylight on Sept. 12. They say the attack occurred about a week after she photographed him exposing himself.

There was no immediate response to a phone message left Wednesday with Mitchell's attorney.

Authorities in West Virginia have said Mitchell was acquitted of a murder charge two decades ago and was considered a person of interest in another slaying that remains unsolved.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=be27667759b6cf993999281a4b8a5b24
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
12.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Woman in Airport Rape Case Just Trying to Breathe

A woman who says she was raped at Denver's airport by a man who spoke with her at a bar says she didn't scream because she was being choked.

The Denver Post reports (http://bit.ly/RxlgFO) the woman, now 23, told jurors Tuesday that she stopped saying no and was just trying to breathe when she was attacked last year on a concourse after refusing a request for a kiss.

The woman testified that suspect Noel Bertrand of Portland, Ore., told her during the attack that the gagging sound she was making was sexy.

Two airline mechanics intervened during the incident at Denver International Airport.

Bertrand's lawyer Wadi Muhaisen (moo-HAY-sen) claims the woman had rough, consensual sex with Bertrand then regretted it.

The trial continues Wednesday.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=a46c58c4dce027c4f266c90559833894
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

UN Backs Shaming of Those Who Use Child Soldiers

The U.N. Security Council is backing the naming and shaming of governments and armed groups that recruit, kill or sexually attack children in armed conflicts.

The council approved the resolution over protests from Russia, China, Pakistan and Azerbaijan, which abstained from the 11-0 vote.

The resolution supports the U.N. special representative for children and armed conflict and continuing annual reports by the secretary-general that identify countries and groups victimizing youngsters.

Pakistan accused the council of exceeding its mandate by including acts by terrorists and criminals that are not conflicts and not on its agenda.

The secretary-general's latest report in June included Syrian government forces and their allied "shabiha" militias on a list of 52 governments and armed groups that recruit, kill or sexually attack children in armed conflicts.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=f975360e7780ded61e15f3c5b9a5f032
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mayor of Struggling RI City to Admit Corruption

The longtime mayor of struggling Central Falls resigned and has agreed to plead guilty to a federal corruption charge of accepting gifts in exchange for handing out a lucrative contract to board up city houses, according to papers filed Wednesday by federal prosecutors.

Charles Moreau and his friend, businessman Michael Bouthillette, were charged. Bouthillette was charged with one count of giving gifts, according to the documents.

Moreau and Bouthillette acknowledge in a plea agreement that Bouthillette paid at least in part for a furnace installed at Moreau's former Central Falls home and for renovations at a home Moreau owned in Lincoln.

In exchange, Moreau used his emergency powers to order homes that were foreclosed be boarded up by Bouthillette's business.

Court papers say Bouthillette boarded up at least 167 houses from 2007 to 2009 and made "unreasonable profits" of hundreds of thousands of dollars. When city employees questioned the amounts Bouthillette was charging for the work, the documents show, Moreau dismissed the concerns, on one occasion telling an employee to "mind his own ... business."

Moreau, who resigned as mayor effective at noon Wednesday, did not answer calls placed to his phone and a message could not be left. His lawyer, William J. Murphy, and Bouthillette's lawyer, C. Leonard O'Brien, did not immediately return calls for comment.

Central Falls had a deficit of more than $6 million on an annual budget of about $16 million by the time a state-appointed received filed for bankruptcy on its behalf, the first time ever in Rhode Island, in August 2011. Moreau was stripped of his duties — along with his key to City Hall — about a year earlier when the state stepped in.

About a quarter of the city's 19,000 residents live below the poverty level, according to census data, and the city has one of the state's highest foreclosure rates.

Moreau has been the target of a yearslong investigation by federal and state authorities into whether he improperly accepted gifts from Bouthillette.

City Council President William Benson Jr. told the AP on Wednesday he is disappointed and that he's "sorry that it's come to this."

"It's terrible for the city," he said. "I feel real bad. The city's going through enough problems as it is."

He said he is waiting to hear from the receiver, John McJennett III, and City Hall on next steps.

Under the city charter, the president of the City Council would serve as the acting mayor. But the receiver, under state law, has the powers of both the mayor and City Council.

Moreau was first elected to lead the state's smallest city in 2003. He would have been up for election next year and planned to run again.

Moreau, who sold his house in Central Falls last year but said he was staying with a friend, often referred to the receivership as a "dictatorship." Along with several City Council members, he took a challenge of the state receivership law all the way to the state Supreme Court, arguing unsuccessfully that it violated their rights as elected leaders and infringed on the city's constitutionally-protected sovereignty.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=eb69b7577984693a5838cb1f3cf54237
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

'CSI' Inspires Taped Interrogations

Police officers in New York City will soon videotape many more interrogations of suspects because jurors are so used to seeing taped interviews on television shows like "CSI" they've come to expect recordings as routine, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said today.

"We believe there's a growing expectation on the part of juries that interviews will be recorded. Call it part of the 'CSI' effect," Kelly said today in a speech at the Carnegie Council, an international affairs think tank.

CSI, the popular police show on TV, "has helped fuel an assumption that these tools are a given in law enforcement. We want to continue to stay ahead of the curve with the help of our recording initiative," Kelly said.

Police in New York have long recorded some suspects' confessions, but in 2010 NYPD officers began recording entire interrogations of suspects accused of felony assault in two precincts in Brooklyn and the Bronx as part of a pilot program. In August, that program was expanded to five precincts.

Under Kelly's new proposal, recordings will expand to all 76 of the city's precincts, making New York the largest police department in the country to record "post-arrest statements," and bringing the city in line with the vast majority of departments in New York State that already videotape interrogations.

The recording initiative will first expand to suspects accused of murder and sex crimes.

Scott Eells/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Already more than two-thirds of police departments in New York State, 341 of 509, require officers to tape interrogations, according to the state's Division of Criminal Justice Services. Across the country 18 states and Washington, D.C., require police to record their interviews, according to the Innocence Project, an organization that promotes using technology to prevent wrongful convictions.

"Recording can aid not only the innocent, the defense and the prosecution, but also enhance public confidence in the criminal justice system," Kelly said.

"The challenge for the commissioner is always trying to build public trust," said Eugene O'Donnell, a former police officer and prosecutor and now a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City.

"Cameras for the police really have not been a problem. They have actually had a positive impact because they are mostly acting properly on the street and in station houses. After [officers] get used to cameras, they tend to embrace them because they [cameras] vindicate them," he said.

As recently as August the Detective Endowment Association, the union representing NYPD detectives, opposed plans to expand recording citywide because the tapes would give criminals tips for what to expect in an interrogation and because jurors might be turned off by hardnosed police techniques.

Michael Palladino, the union president and spokesman, was not immediately available for comment when contacted by ABC News.

"Getting a statement can be an adversarial process," O'Donnell said. "You have to hope that jurors looking at these videos are mature enough to understand this isn't a conversation. Despite all the new science out there, actually getting people to make statements is still vital in prosecuting cases."

Kelly said the first stage of the program to install equipment, refurbish police stations and train cops would be paid for with a $3 million grant from the New York City Police Foundation, a non-profit organization that donates money for NYPD projects outside the department's budget.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=e37e34f2be0774f1b985d1c5d06ba449
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.33 | 0 komentar | Read More

Submarine Commander Faked Death to End Affair

A Navy officer has been relieved of his duties as commander of a submarine following the discovery that he faked his own death in order to end an extramarital affair.

Navy Cmdr. Michael Ward II, 43, was dismissed from his post as the commander of the USS Pittsburgh just one week after he took command.

Ward was dismissed when Navy investigators found out that he had sent his 23-year-old girlfriend an email from a fake co-worker claiming that Ward had died, according to a report obtained by the Associated Press through a Freedom of Information Act.

Ward had met the unidentified Chesapeake, Va., woman through an online dating service in October. The relationship lasted eight months, according to the Navy.

The married officer moved from Virginia to Connecticut to take command of the submarine and tried to end the relationship with the email.

The woman found out that he was alive when she went to his former house to offer condolences and found a new owner who told her Ward had moved to Connecticut.

Jason J. Perry/The Day of New London/U.S. Navy/AP Photo

Ward found out that the woman was pregnant after he moved and met with her to discuss how to handle the pregnancy, according to the AP. The woman lost the baby due to complications.

The Navy's investigation began when a relative of the woman contacted the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) about Ward, a spokeswoman for the Commander Submarine Group 2 in Pittsburgh told ABCNews.com.

Ward was charged with dereliction of duty, conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman, and adultery.

The Navy said in a statement that Ward was relieved of his duties "due to lack of confidence in Ward's ability to command based upon allegations of personal misconduct on the part of Ward."

"Our Navy has a very clear and unambiguous standard regarding the character of our commanding officers, spelled out in the Charge of Command," Capt. Vernon Parks said in a statement. "I reviewed this charge with Cmdr. Ward before he assumed command. He understood the Navy's high standards for command leadership and he failed to uphold them."

The Navy's Charge of Command explicitly states, "It is your responsibility to meet the highest standards of personal and professional conduct at all times."

"All Commanding Officers and others in authority in the naval service are required to show in themselves a good example of honor, virtue, patriotism, and subordination," the charge said.

It also says that commanders are expected "to guard against and suppress all dissolute and immoral practices."

Ward did not respond to request for comment. He has been reassigned to administrative duties under another commander, according to the Navy.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=34ed8034b481ad4d6316c1a1f56e33e2
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pac Ads Zero in on Romney's '47 Percent' Comments

Pro-Obama Super PACs have zeroed in Mitt Romney's controversial secretly recorded remarks to donors, cutting and releasing a number of new ads now posted online and scheduled to run on television in at least six key swing states.

Weaving Romney's more damaging comments about the 47 percent of Americans he dismisses as hopelessly beholden to President Obama with images of "middle class" families and workers, the Priorities USA spot, "Doors," opens with a shot of the lavish Florida mansion that hosted the May 17 fundraiser.

"Behind these doors Mitt Romney calls half the American people 'dependent on government, who believe they are victims," the narrator intones. Then, cutting to an image of a more modest, suburban home, a warning is delivered: "Behind these doors, middle-class families struggle and Romney will make things even tougher."

Romney offered his own response to the criticism in the form of an op-ed piece in this morning's USA Today. In one passage he appears to back off his harsh characterization that 47 percent of the electorate don't pay income taxes and are drawing money from government entitlement programs.

"Under President Obama, we have a stagnant economy that fosters government dependency," he wrote. "My policies will create a growing economy that fosters upward mobility. Government has a role to play here. Right now, our nation's citizens do need help from government. But it is a very different kind of help than what President Obama wants to provide."

Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images

Mitt Romney Video: Republican vs. Democrat Reaction Watch Video
Mitt Romney Video: Campaign Does Damage Control Watch Video
Carney on Romney's '47 Percent' vs Obama's 'Guns and Religion' Watch Video

Romney also assailed what he calls the "web of dependency" being weaved by the administration, promising to "pursue policies that grow our economy and lift Americans out of poverty."

The promises come in tandem with a revived effort -- Sen. John McCain tried a similar tactic in 2008 -- to paint President Obama as a closet socialist bent on "redistributing" American wealth.

Paul Ryan, the Republican vice presidential nominee, jumped into the fray Tuesday night, telling local news affiliates in swing states Nevada, New Hampshire and Virginia that Romney was "obviously inarticulate," but that the underlying theme of the Florida comments was sound.

"The point we're trying to make here is under the Obama economy government dependency is up and economic stagnation is up, and what we're trying to achieve is getting people off of government dependency and back to a job that pays well and gets them onto a path of prosperity," Ryan said during an interview with Joe Hart, from Reno's KRNV.

Speaking to Fox31 in Denver, Ann Romney accused her husband's opponents of misrepresenting his comments.

"I've been on, obviously, on the trail a long time with Mitt and if you listen to the whole context of what Mitt talks about, he is talking about what's happening right now in America and how more and more people are falling into poverty," Mrs. Romney said.

Fellow Republican Susana Martinez, the governor of New Mexico and honorary chair of Romney's Hispanic outreach group, was less forgiving.

"We have a lot of people that are at the poverty level in New Mexico, but they count just as much as anybody else," Martinez said during a press conference Tuesday.

She also defended her state's social welfare programs.

"There is a net that does allow them to be caught and taken care of," she said, "whether it be through medical services, whether it be food services, whether it be with funding for apartments, for housing."

Martinez is not, at this point, scheduled to appear with Romney during his coming Latino outreach effort. The candidate has plans to campaign in Florida, will speak with Univision during a forum tonight, and delivered an address at the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce earlier this week.

Romney acknowledged his difficulty in courting Latino voters during the secretly taped gathering in Florida. His father, former Michigan Gov. George Romney, grew up with expat American parents in Mexico. Had they been born Mexican, "I'd have a better shot at winning this," Romney quipped. "I mean, I say that jokingly… But it would be helpful to be Latino."

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=7c375267b4d5a4bf7a7c0b9787dbf9bc
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pot Could Be Tax Windfall, but Skeptics Abound

A catchy pro-marijuana jingle for Colorado voters considering legalizing the drug goes like this: "Jobs for our people. Money for schools. Who could ask for more?"

It's a bit more complicated than that in the three states — Colorado, Oregon and Washington — that could become the first to legalize marijuana this fall.

The debate over how much tax money recreational marijuana laws could produce is playing an outsize role in the campaigns for and against legalization — and both sides concede they're not really sure what would happen.

At one extreme, pro-pot campaigners say it could prove a windfall for cash-strapped states with new taxes on pot and reduced criminal justice costs.

At the other, state government skeptics warn legalization would lead to costly legal battles and expensive new bureaucracies to regulate marijuana.

In all three states asking voters to decide whether residents can smoke pot, the proponents promise big rewards, though estimates of tax revenue vary widely:

— Colorado's campaign touts money for school construction. Ads promote the measure with the tag line, "Strict Regulation. Fund Education." State analysts project somewhere between $5 million and $22 million a year. An economist whose study was funded by a pro-pot group projects a $60 million boost by 2017.

— Washington's campaign promises to devote more than half of marijuana taxes to substance-abuse prevention, research, education and health care. Washington state analysts have produced the most generous estimate of how much tax revenue legal pot could produce, at nearly $2 billion over five years.

— Oregon's measure, known as the Cannabis Tax Act, would devote 90 percent of recreational marijuana proceeds to the state's general fund. Oregon's fiscal analysts haven't even guessed at the total revenue, citing the many uncertainties inherent in a new marijuana market. They have projected prison savings between $1.4 million and $2.4 million a year if marijuana use was legal without a doctor's recommendation.

"We all know there's a market for marijuana, but right now the profits are all going to drug cartels or underground," said Brian Vicente, a lawyer working for Colorado's Campaign To Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol.

But there are numerous questions about the projections, and since no state has legalized marijuana for anything but medical purposes, the actual result is anyone's guess.

Among the problems: No one knows for certain how many people are buying black-market weed. No one knows how demand would change if marijuana were legal. No one knows how much prices would drop, or even what black-market pot smokers are paying now, though economists generally use a national estimate of $225 an ounce based on self-reported prices compiled online.

"It's difficult to size up a market even if it's legal, certainly if it's illegal," said Jeffrey Miron, a Harvard University economist who has studied the national tax implications of the legalization of several drugs.

In Colorado, the $60 million figure comes from Christopher Stiffler, an economist for the nonpartisan Colorado Center on Law & Policy. He looked at the state's potential marijuana market in a study funded by the pro-legalization Drug Policy Alliance. The figure comes from a combination of state and local taxes and projected savings to law enforcement.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=e26920f175b078b12fdfc019012d73ee
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
11.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Slain Dallas Woman's Family Sues Over 911 Call

The family of a Dallas woman who tried to call 911 and was later found slain inside her home has filed a lawsuit over the handling of her case.

Attorneys for the relatives of Deanna Cook filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city of Dallas and others Wednesday. The suit alleges that police were late responding to the call and relied on inexperienced officers who didn't properly investigate.

Cook called 911 on Aug. 17, and the call center sent two officers to her home. Police say it wasn't made clear there was an emergency. Officers knocked on the door, received no response and left.

Two days later, Cook's family found her dead in her bathtub. Her ex-husband is charged with murder.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=b6e25eff86a5da17fdcc50f9e58ce099
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
10.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

Judge: Texas Firm Must Pay Disabled Workers $1.4M

A Texas company that profited for decades by supplying mentally disabled workers to an Iowa turkey plant at wages of 41 cents per hour must pay the men $1.37 million in back wages, a federal judge ruled late Tuesday.

The judgment against Henry's Turkey Service of Goldthwaite, Texas is the third of more than $1 million against the company after state authorities in 2009 shut down a dilapidated bunkhouse in rural Iowa where the men had lived since the 1970s.

The 32 employees had been paid $65 per month to work the processing line at a huge turkey plant in West Liberty after Henry's improperly deducted fees for room and board, care, transportation and other expenses out of their pay and Social Security checks, U.S. District Judge Charles Wolle ruled. The amount they were paid never changed during the 30-year period they worked at the plant, regardless of whether they worked more than 40 hours per week, he found.

The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which alleged that Hill Country Farms violated the Americans with Disabilities Act by paying the workers discriminatory wages. Wolle ordered a trial in March on the rest of the claims in the EEOC's lawsuit, which alleges that the men faced a hostile work environment, harassment, verbal and physical abuse and other "adverse terms and conditions of employment" because of their disabilities.

Hill Country Farms, which did business as Henry's Turkey Service, offered little resistance to EEOC's wage claims. The company had been on contract to supply workers to the plant starting in the 1970s when it was owned by Louis Rich Foods. By 2008, the company's contract with owner West Liberty Foods was worth more than $500,000 for work performed by the men in the evisceration department.

Wolle said the company "engaged in unlawful and discriminatory pay practices" that deprived workers of wages they earned. He said the $1.37 million represents how much more the intellectually disabled workers should have been paid between February 2007 and February 2009 for their work, based on wage rates paid to similarly-situated and experienced workers. Despite their disabilities, the workers "performed as productively and effectively as non-disabled workers doing the same jobs," he ruled.

Even though they'd been there decades, the law limits their recovery to the two-year period before the violations were reported.

A handful of the workers were employed at the bunkhouse, a converted former schoolhouse a few miles from the plant that Hill Country Farms rented from the city of Atalissa for $600 per month. It was shut down after investigators found substandard construction and other unsafe living conditions, a leaky roof and insect infestation.

The U.S. Department Labor earlier won a $1.76 million judgment against the Henry's on behalf of the workers for violating wage and overtime laws, and Iowa Workforce development issued a $1.2 million fine against the company for violating state labor laws.

The company had agreed to change its wage practices in 2003 following a federal investigation, but it never did so, Wolle ruled.

The Iowa Attorney General's Office last year declined to bring criminal charges against the company or its owners, Kenneth Henry and Jane Ann Johnson, saying it felt that the civil penalties sought by regulators were enough to hold them accountable.

A company lawyer didn't immediately return a phone message Wednesday seeking comment. Henry's Turkey has since closed.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=008538047f98a6ff345a15c5f0c545b0
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
10.03 | 0 komentar | Read More

UAE, Bahrain Confiscate Items Bound for Iran

A diplomat says the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have informed the U.N. that they have confiscated a number of items which could be used in Iran's nuclear program.

The diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Wednesday that the U.N. committee monitoring sanctions on Iran was investigating the items, which include carbon fiber, confiscated by Bahrain. He did not say where the items had been confiscated or from whom.

A U.S. Senate report in 2009 said Iran is eager to obtain carbon fibers and specialized metals for use in advanced centrifuges to enrich uranium, a key ingredient of nuclear weapons. Iran insists its nuclear program is purely peaceful.

Authorities in the UAE and Bahrain declined to discuss the matter, but Gulf officials have pledged to boost inspections of Iran-bound goods for possible sanctions violations.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=e3fa9ad52589b7463821cbe3ef741212
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
09.33 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger